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Baddest Man: The Making Of Mike TysonStock informationGeneral Fields
Special Fields
DescriptionOn a defining evening of the 1980s, Donald Trump hosted celebrities and high rollers in a Jersey Shore town to witness 21-year-old Mike Tyson knock out Michael Spinks in just 91 seconds, earning more than the annual payrolls of the Los Angeles Lakers and Boston Celtics combined.Only eight years earlier, Tyson, a troubled child from Brooklyn, was taken under the wing of boxing legend Cus D'Amato in upstate New York. Their story of mutual redemption captivated novelists, screenwriters, and the emerging cable TV industry. Tyson became HBO's leading man long before Tony Soprano.Despite the immense success, Tyson's story was more complex and darker than it appeared. Over the decades, he has been villainized, lionized, and fetishized--but never fully humanized until now. Acclaimed biographer Mark Kriegel, who first encountered Tyson as a young reporter, explores Tyson's life through what he survived rather than whom he knocked out.Tyson, often compared to Jack Dempsey, was more akin to Sonny Liston--Black, feared, and expected to die young. What made Liston a pariah made Tyson a touchstone for a generation influenced by hip hop and gunfire. Kriegel captures not just Tyson's rise but his profound impact on the American psyche. ReviewsOne of America's finest living sportswriters... the best sports biography I have read in years -- Jonathan Mahler, author of Ladies and Gentlemen, The Bronx is BurningA masterpiece ... [this book] cements Mark Kriegel as the greatest chronicler of fighting and fighters -- Wright Thompson, , New York Times bestselling author of The Barn, Pappyland, and The Cost of These DreamsMark Kriegel has done it again. Baddest Man is the Mike Tyson book all of us (and not just boxing fans) have been waiting for, a biography as nimble and powerful as its subject. Unforgettable -- Jonathan Eig, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of King: A Life and Ali: A Life Author descriptionMark Kriegel, a former sports columnist for the New York Post and the Daily News, is a boxing analyst and essayist for ESPN. He is the author of Namath- A Biography, Pistol- The Life of Pete Maravich and The Good Son- The Life of Ray \"Boom Boom\" Mancini. He lives in Santa Monica, California, with his wife, the screenwriter Jenny Lumet. |